Bezant Resources is tightening its grip on a 2026 production start at the Hope and Gorob copper-gold project, combining steady technical progress with a new N$130 million prepayment facility that has strengthened its development runway.
The remote operation, positioned in the Namib Desert about 120 kilometres south-east of Walvis Bay, is moving from years of exploration into the decisive phase of mine construction and plant preparation.
The financial breakthrough came in the form of a US$7 million prepayment facility linked to a life-of-mine concentrate offtake arrangement with a globally recognised commodities trader.
The deal will be repaid through future concentrate sales and is structured to release funds in tranches, starting with about N$55 million upon finalisation of the agreement.
Investor confidence surged on the news, lifting Bezant’s share price in London and signalling strong support for the company’s transition from explorer to developer.
The funding is tied to Bezant’s planned acquisition of a 90 per cent interest in Namib Lead and Zinc Mining, owner of the processing plant near Swakopmund.
By refurbishing the existing plant rather than building a new flotation facility, Bezant expects to cut 18 months to 2 years from the development schedule.
The acquisition also gives the company access to a dormant lead-zinc resource that could be revived when market conditions improve, creating a second production stream alongside copper and gold.
At the mine site, a pre-concentration plant will be built at the Hope prospect to produce a high-grade copper-gold pre-concentrate capable of bearing the cost of transport to the NLZM facility.
For the first four years, mining will take place entirely from an open pit, producing roughly 600,000 tonnes of ore a year.
From Year 4 to Year 9, the operation will transition into a combined open-pit and underground mine, with total output rising to between 700,000 and 1.2 million tonnes per year.
After Year 9, the mine will operate mainly underground, supported by available open-pit material.
The deposits already hold more than 12 million tonnes of underground resources, including 2.8 million tonnes grading above 2 per cent copper equivalent, providing a strong foundation for long-term mechanised mining.
Because the deposits fall inside the Namib-Naukluft National Park, environmental considerations shaped the project from its earliest stages.
Bezant appointed Environam Consultants Trading to conduct the Environmental and Social Impact Assessment and apply for the Environmental Clearance Certificate.
Public consultations were held at Gobabeb and with the Topnaar community at Utuseb. Sensitivity studies completed in 2022 guided the mine layout to avoid fragile ecological and archaeological areas.
The project stands on the shoulders of decades of exploration dating back to the 1950s.
Various operators carried out early trenching and drilling before South African companies SA Vendome and Nord Mining undertook sustained work between 1970 and 1973.
B&O Minerals, a subsidiary of Johannesburg Consolidated Investments, conducted extensive drilling and airborne surveys into the mid-1980s, mapping the structure, geometry and continuity of the ore zones. Goldfields Namibia, Kalahari Gold and Copper, Kuiseb Minerals, and other operators conducted further exploration and geophysical work from the mid-1990s into the early 2000s.
Australian companies Nimrod Metals and later Virgo Resources advanced the project into modern exploration, with Virgo drilling more than 2,000 metres between 2020 and 2022.
Bezant acquired Virgo Resources in 2020, inheriting its 70 per cent stake in Hope and Gorob Mining and gaining complete control of the project’s technical database.
The result of this history is a detailed geological model that shows three crescent-shaped orebodies at Hope and a steeply dipping planar orebody at Gorob.
The complex geometry requires a mix of mining methods ranging from sub-level open stoping in steep zones to room-and-pillar or cut-and-fill in shallower areas.
The existing JCI shaft at Hope will be refurbished with new headgear to speed underground access once open-pit mining begins.
Project development is advanced. Mine designs, stope modelling, geotechnical analysis, metallurgical test work, ore-sorting trials and processing layouts have all been completed.
Preferred contractors for open-pit mining, haulage and plant construction are in place. Mining Licence ML 246 has been issued, clearing a major regulatory hurdle.
Employment will increase as development accelerates. During construction, the project will require between 50 and 150 workers, primarily contractors.
Once production begins, Hope and Gorob will support around 80 direct jobs, with more opportunities arising from the reopening of NLZM and the parallel circuit for lead-zinc concentration.
Additional community initiatives, including potable water provision and the development of a fish-farming and agribusiness project for the Topnaar community, are part of the wider development plan.
With financing secured, technical groundwork complete and environmental approvals advancing, Bezant is entering the crucial build-up to mine construction.
If schedules hold, 2026 will mark the arrival of a new copper-gold producer in the Matchless Belt, strengthening Namibia’s role as a dependable supplier of copper to a global economy that needs the metal more than ever.



















